Sunday , November 3 2024

British PM slips to worst ever favorability rating

14-12-2023

LONDON: At -49, the British Prime Minister’s net favorability rating is comparable to that Boris Johnson’s at the time of his resignation while Rishi Sunak will be breathing a sigh of relief that he managed to pass his flagship Rwanda bill through the Commons last night in the face of opposition from his own MPs, turning our sight away from Westminster towards the wider population shows the prime minister’s public opinion woes have only been getting worse.

Asked in polling conducted on Monday evening/Tuesday morning ahead of the Commons vote seven in ten Britons (70%) said they had an unfavorable opinion of Rishi Sunak, compared to only 21% with a favorable view. This gives the prime minister his lowest ever net favorability score of -49, a ten point drop from late November.

Sunak’s score is comparable to Boris Johnson’s scores during his final months in office (at the time of his resignation YouGov recorded a low of -53 for the former PM), although still not as bad as Liz Truss’s 70 nadir.

Most 2019 Conservative voters likewise had a negative view of the leader of the party they backed four years ago, at 56% compared to 40% with a positive view. This too represents a new low for the PM.

While Labour are doubtless reveling in the government’s misfortune, neither they nor their leader are seeing any benefit to their own brands. Keir Starmer’s net favorability rating has fallen nine points to -22 over the last fortnight, with the 32% of Britons holding a positive opinion of the Labour leader outweighed by the 54% with a negative one.

The Labour party’s own score stands at -14, compared to -9 at the end of November. This is still streets ahead of the Conservatives, however, whose net score of -49 is identical to that from the previous survey.

Earlier, Rishi Sunak avoided defeat in parliament on Tuesday on an emergency bill to revive his plan to send asylum seekers to Rwanda, seeing off a revolt by dozens of his lawmakers that laid bare his party’s deep divisions.

Sunak, who has pinned his reputation on the strategy, in the end comfortably won the first vote on the legislation in the House of Commons after a day of last ditch negotiations and fears that some of his Conservative lawmakers would help defeat the bill because it was not tough enough.

“The British people should decide who gets to come to this country – not criminal gangs or foreign courts,” Sunak said on X after the result. “That’s what this bill delivers.”

Last month, the UK Supreme Court ruled Sunak’s policy of deporting to Rwanda those arriving illegally in small boats on England’s southern coast would breach British and international human rights laws and agreements. (Int’l Monitoring Desk)

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